EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

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1 Visit www.eeweb.com INTERVIEW Electrical Engineering Community Electrical Engineering Community VIKAS VINAYAK CEO & CO-FOUNDER QUANTANCE VIKAS VINAYAK CEO & CO-FOUNDER QUANTANCE Issue 69 October 23, 2012 Issue 69 October 23, 2012

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Interview with Vikas Vinayak - CEO and Co-Founder of Quantance; The Highs and Lows of Resistance Measurements - Pt. 3; Homemade Tools - Pt. 2; RTZ - Return to Zero Comic

Transcript of EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

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EEWeb PULSE INTERVIEW

Electrical Engineering CommunityElectrical Engineering Community

VIKAS VINAYAKCEO & CO-FOUNDERQUANTANCE

VIKAS VINAYAKCEO & CO-FOUNDERQUANTANCE

Issue 69 October 23, 2012Issue 69 October 23, 2012

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ExpertsExchanging IdeasEvery Day.VISIT DIGIKEY.COM/TECHXCHANGE TODAY!

Digi-Key is an authorized distributor for all supplier partners. New products added daily. © 2012 Digi-Key Corporation, 701 Brooks Ave. South, Thief River Falls, MN 56701, USA

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EEWeb PULSE TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Vikas Vinayak QUANTANCE

Interview with Vikas Vinayak - CEO & Co-Founder

How measuring resistances of mega-ohms or more comes with its own set of challenges and requires different measurement methods.

RTZ - Return to Zero Comic

Featured Products

BY JONATHAN TUCKER WITH KEITHLEY

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Highs and Lows of Resistance Measurements:

Homemade Tools - Part 2

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BY PAUL CLARKE WITH EBM-PAPSTAfter detailing the beginnings of a homemade temperature data logger in Part 1, this second installment describes how to finish the project using an mbed.

Can You Trust Your Test? Part 3

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VikasVinayak

Q U A N T AN

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VikasVinayak

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Quantance is a venture-backed semicon-ductor company based out of Silicon Val-ley. Their goal is to ensure that PAs transmit higher power and operate more efficient-ly for mobile devices. We spoke with Vikas Vinayak, the CEO and Co-founder, about his history in tech start-ups, the qBoost Envelope Tracking technology and how

Quantance is well on its way to changing the LTE market.

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Can you tell us about your work experience before becoming the CEO and Co-Founder at Quantance?

After graduating from college, and as the first Gulf War was ending, the monopolistic hold of the Indian government on Indian television was loosened with the emergence of CNN. Suddenly during prime time you could view more than planting wheat – you could watch CNN and learn what was happening in the world. Then came MTV, and I thought people would certainly prefer music videos to planting wheat. As a result, I believed there was an enormous opportunity for products targeting the growing cable television (CATV) market in India.

Will you tell us about co-founding TouchBeam Systems? What were your roles and responsibilities at this company?

My friends and I decided to go after this opportunity, and we founded TouchBeam Systems to address the CATV market. I became the co-CEO. TouchBeam produced and delivered the first Vestigial Sideband Modulator for the CATV market in India, and expanded that to 85 hardware products designed to meet the growing needs of CATV operators. We’re talking about the distribution of equipment used by cable operators in homes across India. Our products got the signal from the satellite to the receiver in those homes.

Can you tell us about Quantance and the technology you are developing?Quantance is a fabless semiconductor company that makes the industry’s highest performance power supplies. Our

mission is to enable high PA (power amplifier) efficiency and associated RF Front End cost reduction while significantly increasing data throughput from 3G and 4G mobile terminals. In this pursuit, we have

“Quantance is working on delivering an optimized system

solution – an ecosystem – that uses a patented algorithmic approach to adjust the

voltage available to the power amplifier for voice and data.”

developed a unique, high-speed, high-efficiency power supply technology known as qBoost™. It does not add cost to a wireless device, yet enables the cellular chipset to track the RF

signal envelope, supplying only the minimum power required by the PA in real time. This approach to closely managing the PA is known in the industry as “Envelope Tracking” or simply “ET.” The qBoost ET solution replaces the DC/DC switching power supply currently used to provide APT (average power tracking) power solutions, and upgrades that functionality.

We noticed an underlying theorem governing the partitioning of energy flow in all power supplies, which could be exploited to make

better power supplies if two different power supplies could be combined. However, combining these two different power supplies is challenging, and we founded Quantance to discover a way to accomplish this task.

In our people, Quantance has a deep knowledge about RF transceiver and digital baseband solutions. Our developers use that knowledge to focus on the battery and the antenna – the two most critical aspects of the mobile device – and the path connecting them.

We created a new architecture, which had an interesting and unanticipated consequence of making an AC Boost power supply out of a high performance buck convertor. This solved all the front-end problems of heat, mismatch, broadbanding, throughput, unwanted antenna radiation and signal clarity in a unified way. There are many ways to solve one or more of these problems with other engineering techniques, but we believe our approach is the only holistic and systemic one.

Now we have commercialized this power supply over three generations of continually improving and evolving product designs.

A lot of companies are building chips to solve a growing pain for the electronics industry – how to deal with the greater power needed for data in handsets/technology originally designed for voice. If you think about it, the radio signals, or RF, used to transmit voice on a handset are not optimized for data, which requires more power to transfer. Current models are operating inefficiently, creating excessive heat and causing batteries to drain faster.

Quantance is working on delivering an optimized system solution – an

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EEWeb PULSE INTERVIEW ecosystem – that uses a patented algorithmic approach to adjust the voltage available to the power amplifier for voice and data. By doing so, the solution would result in greater efficiency, reduced heat, improved battery life, and better performance in terms of fewer dropped calls. We are building this on the fastest power supply to deliver the exact amount of power required for a specific application at the exact time it’s needed.

The Quantance qBoost ET solution is an entire ecosystem of innovation – soft wrapping around a hard product that delivers unique differentiation to our customers. Handsets are just the first market we’re targeting. The consumer electronics market is wide open and now with the growing use of wireless networks, most devices can benefit from our unique approach.

Can you tell us more about Quantance’s products?

Our main product is our third generation single-chip ET product known as the Q845. Featuring the latest qBoost ET innovations, the Q845 is a very high-speed power supply that generates the supply voltage to deliver the exact amount of power to the most power-hungry circuit inside a cell phone when needed. The most power-hungry circuit is the power amplifier that generates the radio frequency waves that carry the data bits back and forth from your handset to the base station many miles away. The power requirements of the circuit change very rapidly. As cell phones evolve from 2G to 3G to 4G, the rate at which these power requirements change becomes even more rapid and therefore, if you have a very high-speed and high-performance power supply, you can deliver the

exact amount of power, no more, no less. When you deliver only the exact amount of power, there is no excess power that gets burned up as heat and circuits get cooler and when circuits run cooler, they work faster. The net result is, with our technology, an increase in the upload speed of your phone by up to three times.

a car analogy: if you expect your car to go faster, you expect your engine to produce more power, not less. When you go from voice to data, you actually reduce the maximum power that you transmit. The reason is that when you go from voice to data, you add more variation to the signal that you’re transmitting, because you have to incorporate more bits. Because the maximum power of an amplifier is fixed, if you increase the maximum-to-average ratio, that average must go down, because the maximum absolute power is constant.

Can you tell us about Quantance’s qBoost™ Envelope Tracking technology?

With qBoost, we are able to deliver the highest performing, end-to-end ET ecosystem. It includes the Quantance power supply silicon, proprietary noise reduction algorithms that run on the cellular baseband, power amplifiers optimized for envelope tracking, backward compatibility with APT, field measurements audited by carriers, and unique removal of MPR (maximum power reduction) to increase data transmission speeds.

Does this technology compensate for other variables?

The maximum power that a power amplifier can put out is normally constant. An interesting fact is that in every phone—big-name brands included—puts out half the power in data mode as compared to voice mode. Data obviously takes more bits per second than voice. To use

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Our ET solution combines analog and digital power supplies using a patented and deeply mathematical approach involving algorithms from statistical communication theory to create very fast power supplies that work well with sensitive RF front-end circuits while meeting all system noise requirements. The result is fast, efficient power supply that boosts PA voltage above the battery level to meet RF peak demand for higher power and data throughput. It then lowers PA voltage to match reduced RF output power demand for higher efficiency and reduced current. Our power supply has the equivalent switching rate of 400 MHz for best-in-class ET technology.

Do most power amplifiers in current phones work with your power supply technology?

The power amplifiers that are being shipped to 800 million cell phones

a year are designed to work with very slow power s u p p l i e s . They include capacitors to absorb the t r a n s i e n t s that occur in t r a d i t i o n a l designs. In ET systems these c a p a c i t o r s become both unnecessary and an impediment. For amplifiers, we need to remove this capacitor, which is normally a discrete capacitor in the PA module.

In the last 12 months, the momentum behind this technology has been accompanied by a push and a pull. Every single carrier that we are aware of understands the benefits that envelope tracking brings to

the user experience and to network capacity, and they are creating the pull for it. Every single handset manufacturer is coming in to push this technology for additional smart phone performance benefits. Once the ecosystem has signed up to an explicit recognition of the need of this technology, every power amplifier manufacturer will embrace envelope tracking-compliant amplifiers. Today, we are engaged

“ When you deliver only the exact amount of power,

there is no excess power that gets burned up as heat and circuits get

cooler and when circuits run cooler, they work

faster. The net result is, with our technology, an increase in the upload speed of your phone by

up to three times. “

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with several PA manufacturers that have sampled us ET optimized PAs.

What direction do you see Quantance heading in the next few years and what challenges do you foresee along the way?

As the LTE market continues on its exponential growth path, we believe there will be a greater a need for a holistic way to solve the RF problem from the antenna back to the battery, and Quantance participates by contributing more to the system.

Quantance will continue to deploy our unique power supply in all forms of wireless technologies. Many modern consumer devices – even beyond smartphones – transmit radio signals. Almost all of those devices can benefit from our technology.

The proliferation caused by

geographies and newer data standards, such as LTE, has forced an explosion in the RF transmit chains that must be supported in handsets. This is leading to increased strains on cost and size – which is critically important to device makers because of the cost and innovation required to meet consumer demands. Devices must be able to work in multiple modes and geographies, while supporting multiple frequency plans. All of this requires multiple power amplifiers. We hope that with judicious use of other technologies, Quantance can help to eliminate many of those problems.

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High Definition Oscilloscope w/12-Bit ADCTeledyne LeCroy introduced two series of High Definition Oscilloscopes with HD4096 high definition technology, the HDO4000 and HDO6000. Oscilloscopes with HD4096 acquire waveforms with high resolution, high sample rate, and low noise. Waveform displays are cleaner and crisper with 16 times more vertical resolution than traditional 8-bit instruments. The HDO4000 and HDO6000 are available in bandwidths from 200 MHz to 1 GHz. All HDO models sport a large 12.1” touch-screen display and intuitive interface to enhance operation and also provide powerful debug tools, plus a full complement of automatic measurements and waveform math capabilities. For more information, please click here.

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Low Power 16-bit 20Msps ADCsLinear Technology Corporation introduces three low power 16-bit, 20Msps analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), the LTC2269, LTC2270 and LTC2271, offering the lowest input-referred noise and tight integral nonlinearity error (INL) for very high precision DC measurements. With only 46µVRMS input noise and maximum guaranteed INL error of ±2.3LSB, these ADCs are suitable for very low noise, high linearity sampling applications such as digital x-ray, infrared and medical imaging, pachymeters, spectrometry and cytometry. These devices achieve signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) performance of 84dB and SFDR of 99dB at baseband. For more information, please click here.

Optocouplers are the only isolation devices that meet or exceed the IEC 60747-5-5 International Safety Standard for insulation and isolation. Stringent evaluation tests show Avago’s optocouplers deliver outstanding performance on essential safety and deliver exceptional High Voltage protection for your equipment. Alternative isolation technologies such as ADI’s magnetic or TI’s capacitive isolators do not deliver anywhere near the high voltage insulation protection or noise isolation capabilities that optocouplers deliver.

For more details on this subject, read our white paper at: www.avagoresponsecenter.com/672

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Meet the Experts

Design Issues for Systems That Use LCD Panels

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Expert Panel: The Auto Industry Speaks

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The Highs and Lows ofResistance Measurements:Can You TrustYour Test?

Part 3

Jonathan TuckerSenior Marketer And Product ManagerTektronix/Keithley Instruments

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The Highs and Lows ofResistance Measurements:Can You TrustYour Test?

Part 3

Jonathan TuckerSenior Marketer And Product ManagerTektronix/Keithley Instruments

Measuring resistances of mega-ohms or more comes with its own set of challenges and requires different measure-ment methods. The sources of error for high resistance measurements are also quite different than those that af-fect low ohms measurements. High impedance insulators are an integral part of today’s high performance electron-ic products. The purity of the materials used to construct these insulators can make the difference between a prod-uct that works properly and one that doesn’t work at all. For example, crystalline materials are fundamental to modern electronics and optoelectronics.

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Therefore, the electrical properties of these materials, such as their (anisotropic) conductivity and photoconductivity, as well as the temperature dependencies associated with these properties, are of great interest to researchers. The crystals grown using a number of crystallization techniques may be small in size and often exhibit very high resistances (Figure 1).

When resistances greater than one mega-ohm must be measured, an electrometer, SMU, or picoammeter/voltage source combination is usually required. An electrometer may measure high resistance by either the constant-voltage or the constant-current method. Some electrometers allow the user to choose either method. The constant-voltage method uses an ammeter and a voltage source, while the constant-current method uses an electrometer voltmeter and a current source, similar to most DMMs.

The most accepted method of measuring high resistance is to apply a large voltage to a sample and measure the small currents stimulated through that sample. However, for high resistance samples, the levels of current that must be measured are extremely low, so testing these materials accurately and repeatably can be a challenge. Other current sources, such as piezoelectric effects or discharging capacitive elements, can obscure the stimulated current that must be observable in order to calculate resistance.

The basic configuration of the constant-voltage method using an electrometer or picoammeter is shown in Figure 2a. As shown in Figure 2b, an SMU can also be used for making high resistance measurements using the constant-voltage method.

In this method, a constant voltage source (V) is placed in series with the unknown resistor (R) and an ammeter (IM). Given that the voltage drop across the ammeter is negligible, essentially all the test voltage appears across R. The resulting current is measured by the ammeter and the resistance is calculated using Ohm’s Law (R= V/I).

High resistance is often a function of the applied voltage, which makes the constant-voltage method preferable to the constant-current method. By testing at selected voltages, a resistance vs. voltage curve can be developed and a voltage coefficient of resistance can be determined. Some of the applications that use this method include testing two-terminal high resistance devices, measuring insulation resistance, and determining the volume and surface resistivity of insulating materials.

The constant-voltage method requires measuring low current. The two most common error sources when measuring high resistance are electrostatic interference and leakage current. Electrostatic interference can be minimized by shielding the high impedance circuitry. Interferences due to leakage current can be controlled by guarding.

Figure 1: High resistance measurement on crystalline material. (2003 photo courtesy of Dr. Felix Budde, formerly of the MacDiarmid Institute of Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology in Wellington, New Zealand)

Figure 2: Constant-voltage method for measuring high resistance

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Guarding high resistance test connections can significantly reduce the effects of leakage resistance and improve measurement accuracy. Consider the unguarded resistance measurement setup shown in Figure 3. Here, an electrometer ohmmeter is forcing a current (IR) through the unknown resistance (RS) and then measuring the voltage (VM) across the DUT.

Assuming that the meter has infinite input resistance, the measured resistance is RM = VM / IR. However, because the cable leakage resistance (RL) is in parallel with RS, the actual measured resistance (RM) is reduced.

The loading effects of cable resistance (and other leakage resistances) can be virtually eliminated by driving the cable shield with a unity-gain amplifier, as shown in Figure 4.

Given that the voltage across RL is essentially zero, all the test current (IR) now flows through RS, and the source resistance value can be accurately determined. The leakage current (IG) through the cable-to-ground leakage path (RG) may be considerable, but that current is supplied by the low impedance output of the ×1 amplifier rather than by the current source (IR).

Guarding

Figure 3: Effects of cable resistance on high resistance measurements

Figure 4: Guarding cable shield to eliminate leakage resistance

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The settling time of the circuit is particularly important when making high resistance measurements. The settling time of the measurement is affected by the shunt capacitance, which is due to the connecting cable, test fixturing, and the DUT. As shown in Figure 5, the shunt capacitance (CSHUNT) must be charged to the test voltage by the current (IS). The time period required for charging the capacitor is determined by the RC time constant (one time constant, = RSCSHUNT).

Therefore, it becomes necessary to wait four or five time constants to achieve an accurate reading. When measuring very high resistance values, the settling time can range up to minutes, depending on the amount of shunt capacitance in the test system. For example, if CSHUNT is only 10 pico-farads, a test resistance of one tera-ohm will result in a time constant of 10 seconds. Therefore, a settling time of 50 seconds would be required for the reading to settle to within 1% of final value. In order to minimize settling times when measuring high resistance values, keep shunt capacitance in the system to an absolute minimum by keeping connecting cables as short as possible. Also, guarding may be used to decrease settling times substantially. Finally, the source voltage, measure current method of resistance measurement is generally faster because of reduced settling times.

REFERENCES

1. Joseph F. Keithley, The Story of Electrical and Magnetic Measurements: From 500 BC to the 1940s, IEEE Press, 1999, p. 93.

2. Keithley Instruments, Inc., Low Level Measurements Handbook, 6th Edition, 2004.

3. “Making High Resistance Measurements on Small Crystals in Inert Gas or High Vacuum with the Model 6517A Electrometer/High Resistance System,” Application Note #2464, Keithley Instruments, 2003.

4. Keithley Instruments, Inc., “Improving the repeatability of ultra-high resistance and resistivity measurements,” White Paper, 1997.

About the AuthorJonathan Tucker is a Senior Marketer and Product Manager for Keithley Instruments in Cleveland, Ohio, which is part of the Tektronix test and measurement portfolio. He is responsible for business development of Keithley’s research and education business with emphasis in the areas of nanotechnology, semiconductor, energy, printable/organic electronics, and electrochem. He is also product manager for Keithley’s sensitive measurement instruments. He joined Keithley Instruments in 1987 and has held numerous positions, including test engineer, applications engineer, applications manager, and product marketer.

Figure 5: Settling time is the result of RSCSHUNT time constant

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Low Voltage ORing FET ControllerISL6146The ISL6146 represents a family of ORing MOSFET controllers capable of ORing voltages from 1V to 18V. Together with suitably sized N-channel power MOSFETs, the ISL6146 increases power distribution efficiency when replacing a power ORing diode in high current applications. It provides gate drive voltage for the MOSFET(s) with a fully integrated charge pump.

The ISL6146 allows users to adjust with external resistor(s) the VOUT - VIN trip point, which adjusts the control sensitivity to system power supply noise. An open drain FAULT pin will indicate if a conditional or FET fault has occurred.

The ISL6146A and ISL6146B are optimized for very low voltage operation, down to 1V with an additional independent bias of 3V or greater.

The ISL6146C provides a voltage compliant mode of operation down to 3V with programmable Undervoltage Lock Out and Overvoltage Protection threshold levels

The ISL6146D and ISL6146E are like the ISL6146A and ISL6146B respectively but do not have conduction state reporting via the fault output.

Features• ORing Down to 1V and Up to 20V with ISL6146A, ISL6146B,

ISL6146D and ISL6146E

• Programmable Voltage Compliant Operation with ISL6146C

• VIN Hot Swap Transient Protection Rating to +24V

• High Speed Comparator Provides Fast <0.3µs Turn-off in Response to Shorts on Sourcing Supply

• Fastest Reverse Current Fault Isolation with 6A Turn-off Current

• Very Smooth Switching Transition

• Internal Charge Pump to Drive N-channel MOSFET

• User Programmable VIN - VOUT Vth for Noise Immunity

• Open Drain FAULT Output with Delay- Short between any two of the ORing FET Terminals- GATE Voltage and Excessive FET VDS- Power-Good Indicator (ISL6146C)

• MSOP and DFN Package Options

Applications• N+1 Industrial and Telecom Power Distribution Systems

• Uninterruptable Power Supplies

• Low Voltage Processor and Memory

• Storage and Datacom Systems

TABLE 1. KEY DIFFERENCES BETWEEN PARTS IN FAMILY

PART NUMBER KEY DIFFERENCES

ISL6146A Separate BIAS and VIN with Active High Enable

ISL6146B Separate BIAS and VIN with Active Low Enable

ISL6146C VIN with OVP/UVLO Inputs

ISL6146D ISL6146A wo Conduction Monitor & Reporting

ISL6146E ISL6146B wo Conduction Monitor & Reporting

FIGURE 1. TYPICAL APPLICATION FIGURE 2. ISL6146 GATE HIGH CURRENT PULL-DOWN

VIN GATE VOUT

GND

ADJ

+

-

+

VOUT

+

-

+ COMMONPOWERBUS

Q1

ISL6146BFLT

BIAS

VOLTAGE

DC/DCVOLTAGE

DC/DC

EN

(3V - 20V)

(3V - 20V)

Q2

COMMONPOWERBUS

VIN GATE VOUT

GND

ADJISL6146B

FLT

BIAS

EN

GATE FAST OFF, ~200ns FALL TIME~70ns FROM 20V TO 12.6V ACROSS 57nFGATE OUTPUT SINKING ~ 6A

October 5, 2012FN7667.3

Intersil (and design) is a registered trademark of Intersil Americas Inc. Copyright Intersil Americas Inc. 2011, 2012All Rights Reserved. All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.

Get the Datasheet and Order Samples

http://www.intersil.com

Page 20: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

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Page 21: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

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Page 22: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

EEWeb PULSE TECH ARTICLE

22 EEWeb | Electrical Engineering Community18

Back in July I introduced the idea of building your own homemade tools -- stuff that can give you features that tools in the shops can’t, or perhaps just less expensive than those available in stores.

In Part Two I will document the building of my own home tempera-ture data logger using an mbed.

Part 2HomemadeTools Part 1

Paul ClarkeElectronics Design

Engineer

Part 2Back in July I introduced the idea of building your own homemade tools — stuff that can give you features that tools in the shops can’t, or perhaps just less expensive than those available in stores.

In Part Two I will document the building of my own home temperature data logger using an mbed.

Page 23: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

EEWeb PULSE TECH ARTICLE

23Visit www.eeweb.com 19

HomemadeTools Part 1

Paul ClarkeElectronics Design

Engineer

Page 24: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

EEWeb PULSE TECH ARTICLE

24 EEWeb | Electrical Engineering Community

Using the mbed gets you right off the ground very fast with its microcontroller, compiler online, and wealth of tools, sample code, and available help. I started by looking at the temperature inputs I wanted, and I decided I wanted three temperature inputs. Two of these would use NTC temperature sensors, and the other a thermocouple.

The NTCs are resistors that change value as the temperature around them alters. Having a negative temperature coefficient (NTC) means that as the temperature rises the resistance drops. These sensors come in different shapes and sizes. The ones I have have a resistance of 10k at 25’c. You will find all NTCs have their resistance listed in this way.

My circuit for the NTC could not be more sim-ple. I’m only looking for a basic input, so I will use the NTC as part of a resistor network across the mbeds supply. The center tapping will then be used as an input (analog) to the mbed. The input is very basic and has no filtering, gain, or range control. You could achieve this with a opamp, but I have found that for normal room temperature readings using a matched resistor in the fixed side of the network works well.

To the right, you will see our NTC and 10k re-sistor. This gives a voltage of half rail voltage at 25’c. When the temperature goes up the volt-age at the input goes down.

NTC Circuit

The mbed itself is just as easy to set up by us-ing the AnalogIn class and telling the compiler what pin you have connected your signal too. Each time you want to read the value after that you just use the variable declared. However, for my code I have decided to use the raw values that come from the internal ADC, so I am ac-

cessing the variable using the read_u16 func-tion as shown below:

- Analog In Ain1(p19);

- some Value = Ain1.read_u16();

Thermocouple Input

The thermocouple input is a little more diffi-cult as you can’t just connect it to your mbed. The theromocouple input needs a chip that can amplify the weak signal it generates and then pass it to the mbed. Old chips used to give you a analog voltage, but these days you can connect to these devices over communication buses like SPI. To make our life simpler I have selected the max31855 IC that does just this. And to make things even easier,I got this on a prototype board from TAUTIC. This means no fiddly surface mount soldering – you just have to connect the data and power pins.

NTC Circuit

Page 25: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

EEWeb PULSE TECH ARTICLE

25Visit www.eeweb.com

The SPI interfaces to the max chip using a 32 bit block of data. However the pre-written func-tion within the mbed that allows direct access to the SPI bus only goes up to a 16 bit format. This would have made interfacing to the device as easy as the NTC and analog pins. However SPI is really easy to deal with anyway, so below I have written my own code to interface to the device.

SPI_CodeThe last thing I’ll need to add this time round is a serial connection to use for debugging and then later for our Xbee.

Once again this is really easy to add to your mbed. Add the Serial class with the pre-defined RX and TX pins and then install the mbed USB to serial driver on your PC, and you are done!

I use a small free program called putty.exe that can be used as a serial terminal. Set the baud rate to 9600 and coms port (you can find this in device manager under “Serial Ports” in Windows) and then you can get data from your mbed.

Last thing to do this time round is to send the col-lected data, one second at a time, and send it over the se-rial port (code below). The data from the NTCs is still raw ADC counts and not in T’c as yet but the data from the max chip is.

Output Code

Next time I will turn the raw ADC counts into T’c and also

look at storing the data on the mbed’s flash. If you would like to see the full code you can download it form here: http://mbed.org/users/monpjc/code/temperature_logger_Pt2/

You will see that I only need the block of bits from bit 1 (where 0 is the first) to 11. The rest are thrown away. A little shift register in c code and you can quickly get your data from the max chip. I really should look at the timings on a scope but it’s work-ing right now -- I will check the details later on but I suspect I’m well within limits.

Output Code

Page 26: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

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Page 27: EEWeb Pulse - Issue 69

NXP’s proven interface products enable medical and health system designers

to add features with minimal modifications. Within our portfolio you’ll find LCD

displays and capacitive touch interfaces, system connectivity bridges & UARTs, LED

controllers, real-time clocks, and I2C-bus peripherals & enablers.

To learn more, visit http://www.nxp.com/campaigns/medical-interfaces/2248

Breathe new life into medical product interfaces